**Author's note: My apologies for dropping this story, as I found myself with a nearly insurmountable bout of writer's block with it. So, after a 9-month delay, I've decided to finish this beast.
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* * *
Lightner entered the security bay to discover Agent Pokrol already interrogating a Romulan officer in an adjoining interview room.
“How is it that Agent Pokrol’s interviewing prisoners?” Lightner inquired of the junior lieutenant manning the security workstation.
“Sir?” the younger woman appeared confused. “Our standing orders from you are to give DTI full cooperation. Did I miss an update, Captain?”
Lightner hesitated a moment before shaking his head. “No, Lieutenant, no update. I’m just surprised he’s jumped on this so quickly. Is this his first interview?”
“No, sir. His second.”
He utilized his command override code to access the interview room’s audio system as he inserted a small earpiece from the security console.
“…nd the temporal variances involved?” Pokrol was saying.
“I know nothing of such things,” the man replied heatedly. “I fly the ship, that’s all. All the time-wizardry, all that is the others’ affair. I’ve never believed half of the idiocy they’ve spewed about restoring Romulus and the empire. They’re chasing after childish fantasies.”
“You must know something,” Pokrol insisted. “Your ships are equipped with temporal weaponry.”
“Weaponry designed and maintained by the scientists,” the centurion rebutted. “I need not know the scientific theory behind a weapon to aim the thing. It is enough that I pull the trigger and it fires.”
Pokrol stared at the centurion for a long moment, then stood abruptly and made his way to the exit.
The door slid aside to reveal Lightner on the other side.
“Captain,” Pokrol said dismissively, moving past him. He had begun to gesture towards another of the prisoners when his wrist-communicator chimed.
“Bridge to Agent Pokrol.”
“Go ahead.”
“Your team’s runabout is on approach. They’ll be touching down in the main shuttlebay in fifteen minutes.”
“Understood,” he said, closing the channel.
As Pokrol exited the compartment, Lightner turned and stepped into the interview room, closing the door behind him, and taking a seat across from the stone-faced Romulan centurion.
“Salmis. Where is he? Was he on one of your ships or is he at some other location?”
The Romulan’s expression shifted just enough that it might as well as been a flinch or a full-fledged gasp of surprise.
“Where is Salmis?” Lightner repeated.
“I don’t—”
“Spare me the lies, Sub-Lieutenant,” Lightner said reasonably. “How do you think we knew you were coming? He betrayed you, and now hundreds of your comrades are dead and you’re here, my prisoner.”
A green flush crept up the Romulan’s neck.
“Where is Salmis?” Lightner asked again.
* * *
Pokrol was standing by as the DTI team disembarked the runabout, dressed in nondescript civilian garb and carrying assorted bags with them.
The Deltan team leader, Afnaran, inclined his head to Pokrol as he passed. “Have you been behaving yourself? I trust I won’t have to be smoothing over any damaged relationships with Starfleet again?”
Pokrol glowered. “Just establishing an effective chain-of-command. I would remind you that I have been assigned to lead this mission.”
Afnaran, his bald head encircled by a stylized headband, stared down at his shorter subordinate. “We’re investigators, not the secret police. Cooperation isn’t elicited by antagonistic posturing. You have a habit of making our assignments more complicated than they need to be.”
Pokrol fell in beside him, casting a glance over his shoulder at the rest of the team, who pretended not to be listening. “We can discuss this later.”
“If you insist,” Afnaran conceded. “I’ve been reading up on the ship’s captain. He doesn’t strike me as someone we want to anger.”
“Lightner? He’s an indecisive burnout, one whose already learned the importance of cooperating with our priorities,” Pokrol announced, the hint of pride in his tone unmistakable.
“And just how did this supposed ‘burnout’ land a choice command like Gibraltar?” Afnaran asked acidly.
“The last ship Lightner commanded was on its way home from a deep-space exploration assignment and just missed the Frontier Day Borg fiasco by a matter of weeks. Starfleet lost hundreds of command-level officers in a single day. He was basically awarded the ship by default.”
Afnaran shook his head. “How you can study a person’s service record so thoroughly, yet misunderstand it so completely is beyond me.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning that man has been tested, repeatedly throughout his career. He may appear broken and easily swayed, but you’re just the kind of pain in the ass to remind him what he’s made of.”
Pokrol shook his head. “I don’t see it. I’ve met the man up close, and he doesn’t have it in him to put a fight.”
“Suit yourself,” Afnaran replied with just a hint of fatalism.
* * *
Lighter waited patiently for the door to Dr. Kemet’s guest cabin to open. The security specialist standing next to the hatch stared straight ahead after having briefly acknowledged the captain’s arrival.
Kemet finally toggled the doors open, her expression yielding mild surprise and some relief that he was not one of the DTI detachment. “Captain Lightner. Please, come in.”
She invited him to sit on the couch in front of the viewports, taking a chair across the low coffee table from him. “What can I do for you?”
“Doctor, I’ve been contacted by one of the researchers from the Revisionist faction. He… well, he contacted me decades in the future, events that I’m able to remember now due to some manner of inter-temporal memory engram activity.”
Kemet’s face registered curiosity. “How extraordinary. You’ve confirmed this contact?”
“As best we’re able, yes. In fact, Temporal Investigations verified it.”
“And what did this person say?” she asked.
“He’s continued trying to recruit me to assist him with his plan to recover Romulus from before its destruction.” Lightner sat forward, exuding an energy and enthusiasm Kemet had yet to see from him. “Could they really do it, Doctor? Could they actually go back in time and shift Romulus elsewhere before the supernova?”
She was silent for a moment before hesitantly offering, “Theoretically, yes. Nothing that I’ve seen would preclude them from making the attempt. The size of the crystals involved appear to have little or no impact on their temporal potential.”
“And if we were to assist them,” Lightner pressed. “How many billions of lives could we save?”
“To what end, Captain?” Kemet shot back with a spark of genuine anger. She stood, her frame rigid with indignation as she vented her truth, a truth kept far too long in check. “All those people are long dead. Their families have mourned and moved on. Widowers have taken new spouses; orphans have grown to adulthood. Even if they could be saved, what kinds of lives would they come back to?
“The empire was teetering on the brink long before our star went nova. The fact that a dying human clone backed by Reman separatists could have so easily overthrown the senate was proof enough of that. Rampant corruption polluted all levels of government and industry while the people at the bottom eked out a meager living hand-to-mouth. The Tal Shiar and the military stamped out all political and social opposition, while we squeezed our imperial holdings for every scrap of ore we could get our hands on. As far as economic neocolonialism goes, we Romulans put pre-war Cardassia to shame!”
Lightner was struck speechless by the venom and anguish Kemet had directed at him, finding himself without words with which to respond.
“Despite the horrific loss of life, the destruction of Romulus is the best thing to happen to the Romulan people in a thousand years, Captain. The social and political upheaval, the fracturing of the state and the weakening of the Tal Shiar, all have freed our society in ways which may never have been possible otherwise.
“The Revisionists seek a return to the old ways, to the graft and repression that kept our people from achieving their true potential. Even if I thought it feasible, I would not help them.” She turned her back on Lightner, staring out the viewport at unfamiliar constellations. “And even if it could be done, Romulus would be torn apart in the process. The planet would be wracked by massive tidal forces as Remus vanishes from its orbit, shaken to its core by tectonic spasms that would lay waste every major population center. Millions would die, and it would take the combined might of our entire culture decades to rebuild it.”
Lightner stepped forward, his hands clasped behind his back. “So, this was all a fantasy? Despite their acquiring the time crystals, it was never a real possibility?”
She looked back at him and then turned to face him fully. “They only want what Romulus represents. The people, the infrastructure, all that is secondary. If the planet itself is recovered, they believe they can use that symbolism to reforge a new Romulan Empire.”
“I see.”
“Do you, Captain?” Kemet’s face darkened, her eyes glistening. “We spent a decade cursing the Federation for refusing to help us any further after their rescue fleet was destroyed at Mars. But it turns out that we did that to ourselves, too. The attack ended up being the work of a core cadre of the Tal Shiar, a cult of anti-AI extremists. Every step of the way we Romulans have seen fit to turn emergencies into tragedies, cutting off our collective nose to spite our face, as you humans say.”
Lightner shook his head sadly. “I’m sorry, Doctor. I thought I saw some hope in all this… a chance to undo a great catastrophe that robbed your people of so much. I was obviously being naïve.”
Kemet touched her side, offering a sad smile. “Your heart was in the right place…” she moved her hand to her chest, the location of the human heart. “Almost.”
Lighter actually smiled at that.
“I’d always considered myself a patriot, right up until The Fall,” Kemet continued. “Only after was I able to see how flawed, corrupt, and fragile Romulan society had become. My exposure to the Federation, even with all its many issues, has shown me what we might someday strive to become. Many supposed experts refer to The Fall and the Diaspora as a fixed historical event. It’s not. It’s still happening, all around us. The Revisionists, the New Rihann Separatists, the Free State, all the other factions, all the scheming and infighting, it's all part of the continuing collapse and reformation of our society.”
Lightner dipped his head. “Again, please forgive my gullibility, Dr. Kemet. I realize now that the Revisionist agenda is unrealistic. I would, however, ask for your help in utilizing the time crystals in achieving something far less drastic.”
Kemet quirked an eyebrow in an unconsciously Vulcan-like gesture. “Oh? What did you have in mind?”
“My crewmembers that died during the Revisionist attack on Chedrova VI, I’m going back for them. I know DTI will object, and that they’re obligated to try and stop me. I don’t care.”
Kemet’s chin lifted slightly, her eyes narrowing. “I’m listening, Captain.”
* * *